Since only part of a large buffer fits in the window, Emacs tries to
show a part that is likely to be interesting. Display-control commands
allow you to specify which part of the text you want to see, and how to
display it.

If a buffer contains text that is too large to fit entirely within a
window that is displaying the buffer, Emacs shows a contiguous portion of
the text. The portion shown always contains point.

Scrolling means moving text up or down in the window so that
different parts of the text are visible. Scrolling forward means that text
moves up, and new text appears at the bottom. Scrolling backward moves
text down and new text appears at the top.

Scrolling happens automatically if you move point past the bottom or top
of the window. You can also explicitly request scrolling with the commands
in this section.

C-l

Clear screen and redisplay, scrolling the selected window to center
point vertically within it (recenter).

C-v

Scroll forward (a windowful or a specified number of lines) (scroll-up).

The most basic scrolling command is C-l (recenter) with
no argument. It clears the entire screen and redisplays all windows.
In addition, it scrolls the selected window so that point is halfway
down from the top of the window.

The scrolling commands C-v and M-v let you move all the text
in the window up or down a few lines. C-v (scroll-up) with an
argument shows you that many more lines at the bottom of the window, moving
the text and point up together as C-l might. C-v with a
negative argument shows you more lines at the top of the window.
M-v (scroll-down) is like C-v, but moves in the
opposite direction. The function keys NEXT and PRIOR are
equivalent to C-v and M-v.

The names of scroll commands are based on the direction that the text
moves in the window. Thus, the command to scroll forward is called
scroll-up because it moves the text upward on the screen.

To read the buffer a windowful at a time, use C-v with no argument.
It takes the last two lines at the bottom of the window and puts them at
the top, followed by nearly a whole windowful of lines not previously
visible. If point was in the text scrolled off the top, it moves to the
new top of the window. M-v with no argument moves backward with
overlap similarly. The number of lines of overlap across a C-v or
M-v is controlled by the variable next-screen-context-lines; by
default, it is 2.

Some users like the full-screen scroll commands to keep point at the
same screen line. To enable this behavior, set the variable
scroll-preserve-screen-position to a non-nil value. This
mode is convenient for browsing through a file by scrolling by
screenfuls; if you come back to the screen where you started, point goes
back to the line where it started. However, this mode is inconvenient
when you move to the next screen in order to move point to the text
there.

Another way to do scrolling is with C-l with a numeric argument.
C-l does not clear the screen when given an argument; it only scrolls
the selected window. With a positive argument n, it repositions text
to put point n lines down from the top. An argument of zero puts
point on the very top line. Point does not move with respect to the text;
rather, the text and point move rigidly on the screen. C-l with a
negative argument puts point that many lines from the bottom of the window.
For example, C-u - 1 C-l puts point on the bottom line, and C-u
- 5 C-l puts it five lines from the bottom. Just C-u as argument,
as in C-u C-l, scrolls point to the center of the selected window.

The C-M-l command (reposition-window) scrolls the current
window heuristically in a way designed to get useful information onto
the screen. For example, in a Lisp file, this command tries to get the
entire current defun onto the screen if possible.

Scrolling happens automatically if point has moved out of the visible
portion of the text when it is time to display. Normally, automatic
scrolling centers point vertically within the window. However, if you
set scroll-conservatively to a small number n, then if you
move point just a little off the screen--less than n lines--then
Emacs scrolls the text just far enough to bring point back on screen.
By default, scroll-conservatively is 0.

The variable scroll-margin restricts how close point can come
to the top or bottom of a window. Its value is a number of screen
lines; if point comes within that many lines of the top or bottom of the
window, Emacs recenters the window. By default, scroll-margin is
0.

Horizontal scrolling means shifting all the lines sideways
within a window--so that some of the text near the left margin
is not displayed at all.

C-x <

Scroll text in current window to the left (scroll-left).

C-x >

Scroll to the right (scroll-right).

When a window has been scrolled horizontally, text lines are truncated
rather than continued (see section Continuation Lines), with a `$'
appearing in the first column when there is text truncated to the left,
and in the last column when there is text truncated to the right.

The command C-x < (scroll-left) scrolls the selected
window to the left by n columns with argument n. This moves
part of the beginning of each line off the left edge of the window.
With no argument, it scrolls by almost the full width of the window (two
columns less, to be precise).

C-x > (scroll-right) scrolls similarly to the right. The
window cannot be scrolled any farther to the right once it is displayed
normally (with each line starting at the window's left margin);
attempting to do so has no effect. This means that you don't have to
calculate the argument precisely for C-x >; any sufficiently large
argument will restore the normal display.

You can request automatic horizontal scrolling by enabling Hscroll
mode. When this mode is enabled, Emacs scrolls a window horizontally
whenever that is necessary to keep point visible and not too far from
the left or right edge. The command to enable or disable this mode is
M-x hscroll-mode.

Follow mode is a minor mode that makes two windows showing the
same buffer scroll as one tall "virtual window." To use Follow mode,
go to a frame with just one window, split it into two side-by-side
windows using C-x 3, and then type M-x follow-mode. From
then on, you can edit the buffer in either of the two windows, or scroll
either one; the other window follows it.

Emacs has the ability to hide lines indented more than a certain number
of columns (you specify how many columns). You can use this to get an
overview of a part of a program.

To hide lines, type C-x $ (set-selective-display) with a
numeric argument n. Then lines with at least n columns of
indentation disappear from the screen. The only indication of their
presence is that three dots (`...') appear at the end of each
visible line that is followed by one or more hidden ones.

The commands C-n and C-p move across the hidden lines as
if they were not there.

The hidden lines are still present in the buffer, and most editing
commands see them as usual, so you may find point in the middle of the
hidden text. When this happens, the cursor appears at the end of the
previous line, after the three dots. If point is at the end of the
visible line, before the newline that ends it, the cursor appears before
the three dots.

To make all lines visible again, type C-x $ with no argument.

If you set the variable selective-display-ellipses to
nil, the three dots do not appear at the end of a line that
precedes hidden lines. Then there is no visible indication of the
hidden lines. This variable becomes local automatically when set.

The current line number of point appears in the mode line when Line
Number mode is enabled. Use the command M-x line-number-mode to
turn this mode on and off; normally it is on. The line number appears
before the buffer percentage pos, with the letter `L' to
indicate what it is. See section Minor Modes, for more information about
minor modes and about how to use this command.

If the buffer is very large (larger than the value of
line-number-display-limit), then the line number doesn't appear.
Emacs doesn't compute the line number when the buffer is large, because
that would be too slow. If you have narrowed the buffer
(see section Narrowing), the displayed line number is relative to the
accessible portion of the buffer.

You can also display the current column number by turning on Column
Number mode. It displays the current column number preceded by the
letter `C'. Type M-x column-number-mode to toggle this mode.

Emacs can optionally display the time and system load in all mode
lines. To enable this feature, type M-x display-time. The
information added to the mode line usually appears after the buffer
name, before the mode names and their parentheses. It looks like this:

hh:mmpm l.ll

Here hh and mm are the hour and minute, followed always by
`am' or `pm'. l.ll is the average number of running
processes in the whole system recently. (Some fields may be missing if
your operating system cannot support them.) If you prefer time display
in 24-hour format, set the variable display-time-24hr-format
to t.

The word `Mail' appears after the load level if there is mail
for you that you have not read yet.

Some ASCII control characters are displayed in special ways. The
newline character (octal code 012) is displayed by starting a new line.
The tab character (octal code 011) is displayed by moving to the next
tab stop column (normally every 8 columns).

Other ASCII control characters are normally displayed as a caret
(`^') followed by the non-control version of the character; thus,
control-A is displayed as `^A'.

Non-ASCII characters 0200 through 0377 are displayed with octal escape
sequences; thus, character code 0243 (octal) is displayed as
`\243'. However, if you enable European display, most of these
characters become non-ASCII printing characters, and are displayed using
their graphics (assuming your terminal supports them).
See section Single-byte European Character Support.

The variable mode-line-inverse-video controls whether the mode
line is displayed in inverse video (assuming the terminal supports it);
nil means don't do so. See section The Mode Line. If you specify the
foreground color for the modeline face, and
mode-line-inverse-video is non-nil, then the default
background color for that face is the usual foreground color.
See section Using Multiple Typefaces.

If the variable inverse-video is non-nil, Emacs attempts
to invert all the lines of the display from what they normally are.

If the variable visible-bell is non-nil, Emacs attempts
to make the whole screen blink when it would normally make an audible bell
sound. This variable has no effect if your terminal does not have a way
to make the screen blink.

When you reenter Emacs after suspending, Emacs normally clears the
screen and redraws the entire display. On some terminals with more than
one page of memory, it is possible to arrange the termcap entry so that
the `ti' and `te' strings (output to the terminal when Emacs
is entered and exited, respectively) switch between pages of memory so
as to use one page for Emacs and another page for other output. Then
you might want to set the variable no-redraw-on-reenter
non-nil; this tells Emacs to assume, when resumed, that the
screen page it is using still contains what Emacs last wrote there.

The variable echo-keystrokes controls the echoing of multi-character
keys; its value is the number of seconds of pause required to cause echoing
to start, or zero meaning don't echo at all. See section The Echo Area.

If the variable ctl-arrow is nil, control characters in
the buffer are displayed with octal escape sequences, except for newline
and tab. Altering the value of ctl-arrow makes it local to the
current buffer; until that time, the default value is in effect. The
default is initially t. See section `Display Tables' in The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

Normally, a tab character in the buffer is displayed as whitespace which
extends to the next display tab stop position, and display tab stops come
at intervals equal to eight spaces. The number of spaces per tab is
controlled by the variable tab-width, which is made local by
changing it, just like ctl-arrow. Note that how the tab character
in the buffer is displayed has nothing to do with the definition of
TAB as a command. The variable tab-width must have an
integer value between 1 and 1000, inclusive.

If the variable truncate-lines is non-nil, then each
line of text gets just one screen line for display; if the text line is
too long, display shows only the part that fits. If
truncate-lines is nil, then long text lines display as
more than one screen line, enough to show the whole text of the line.
See section Continuation Lines. Altering the value of truncate-lines
makes it local to the current buffer; until that time, the default value
is in effect. The default is initially nil.

If the variable truncate-partial-width-windows is
non-nil, it forces truncation rather than continuation in any
window less than the full width of the screen or frame, regardless of
the value of truncate-lines. For information about side-by-side
windows, see section Splitting Windows. See also section `Display' in The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

The variable baud-rate holds the output speed of the
terminal, as far as Emacs knows. Setting this variable does not change
the speed of actual data transmission, but the value is used for
calculations such as padding. It also affects decisions about whether
to scroll part of the screen or redraw it instead--even when using a
window system. (We designed it this way, despite the fact that a window
system has no true "output speed," to give you a way to tune these
decisions.)

You can customize the way any particular character code is displayed
by means of a display table. See section `Display Tables' in The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.